Transcript

ANDREA SCHNEIBEL: Welcome to Science Minute, a research audiocast by the University of Tennessee. I’m Andrea Schneibel.

In the 1930s, an anthropologist named Florence Hawley conducted extensive research in dendrochronology, a science that studies the information contained in tree rings.

LAURA SMITH: With that work she collected samples of various species from both living trees in the region and from archeological sites that would have been associated with Native American mounds, and all of that would be inundated by the Norris Reservoir in eastern Tennessee. She was trying to find a correlation between precipitation and annual tree growth.

SMITH: So we can now measure tree rings very, very precisely. So my research aims to combine modern red cedar samples that we’ll be taking from Tennessee cedar glades in central and eastern Tennessee with the historical samples from Dr. Hawley’s collection to develop long-running chronologies that will be used to create records of stream flow and precipitation in the Tennessee River Valley over several hundred years.

SCHNEIBEL: But Smith has an additional goal with her research: she wants to tell the world about a woman who was a trailblazer in science.

SMITH: Dr. Hawley was one of the very first women to enter the field of dendrochronology, and her contributions were extremely significant. She had to fight a lot of prejudices and her correspondences with her colleagues really show that. I think there’s a lot that we can learn from her experiences.

SCHNEIBEL: For the University of Tennessee, I’m Andrea Schneibel with Science Minute.

Science Minute is an audiocast dedicated to showcasing the work and expertise of faculty members and researchers at the University of Tennessee. Whether it is the latest news in microbiology, health sciences, or history and anthropology, UT experts will explain complex topics in 90-second episodes.

Science Minute is produced by the Office of Communications and Marketing at the University of Tennessee. New episodes are released every other Thursday.